these are united farmworkers procession. this story looks rather different through this multiracial lens. the photo on the right shows the states most recognizable militant leader in the black civil rights movement, greeting chicano farmers. he had just led a group of african-american youth on a march through east texas and was tying it to media mexican-american farmers when they arrived on labor day. on the left, another photograph. they all came together to demand this minimum wage increase as well as civil rights and labor rights. the third of this coalition i think helps us to rethink important questions around relationships. scholarships, ash fall into one of these two camp's. emphasizing cooperation. african-americans and mexican-americans were neither natural allies nor inveterate enemies. they were simply different. they had different leaders, they lived in different neighborhoods, practice different religions. sometimes spoke different religious, different cultural practices. all sorts of different lines of differen